If you were in the crowd watching Taylor Swift at the MetLife Stadium in East Rutherford, New Jersey on Friday night, you were probably just as shocked as everyone else to see the world champion U.S. women’s soccer team onstage!

As part of her “1989 World Tour,” T-Swift brought the team out onstage to help her perform “Style.” Four of the women’s players hail from the Garden State. And the ladies didn’t come onstage empty handed: they had their championship trophy in tow and held it in the air as the crowd below went nuts.

Also in the building for the show were a few of Taylor’s famous friends and “Bad Blood” video co-stars including Lena Dunham, Hailee Steinfeld, Gigi Hadid and Lily Aldridge. Supermodel Heidi Klum also jumped onstage and The Weeknd came out to perform his current single, “Can’t Feel My Face.” Swift’s tour wraps December 12th in Melbourne, Australia.

Taylor Swift Scolded Apple Music for Not Paying Artists, and Apple Caved

Earlier this month, Apple announced Apple Music, a streaming service that would cost $9.99 a month after a three-month free trial. But during that introductory period, artists, writers, and producers would NOT be paid.

TAYLOR SWIFT didn’t like that. She announced that her new album “1989” wouldn’t be on the service, and scolded Apple in an “open letter” on her website.

She said, quote, “I find it to be shocking, disappointing, and completely unlike this historically progressive and generous company . . . three months is a long time to go unpaid, and it is unfair to ask anyone to work for nothing.

“We don’t ask you for free iPhones. Please don’t ask us to provide you with our music for no compensation.” She said she isn’t speaking up as a, quote, “spoiled, petulant child,” but for the smaller artists who are struggling to make ends meet.

And last night, someone from Apple said they’d changed their minds . . . Tweeting, quote, “Apple Music WILL pay artists for streaming, even during customers’ free trial period. We hear you Taylor and indie artists. Love, Apple.”

(Taylor’s whole letter is on her Tumblr page, here. It’s pretty well-written, although she seems careful not to attack Apple TOO viciously, since she apparently likes that their goal is for paid streaming.)